Изменить стиль страницы

At this point Mudd gave me a skeptical smirk. “You expect me to believe that?” he jeered.

“Well, yes,” I said, taken aback. “Why wouldn’t you?”

“Because you’re the one who found the body.”

“So…?”

“So the one who discovers the corpse often turns out to be the killer.”

Uh-oh.

“You could have jumped into the pool on purpose,” he said, still smirking. “It could have been you that held the victim’s head underwater until she died.” He stuck a cigarette between his lips, lit it, and went on. “Maybe you were crazy jealous of her. Maybe she was the reason you had a big fight with your boyfriend.”

“My boyfriend never even met her!” I declared, realizing- as I spoke-that I didn’t know if he had or not.

Mudd took a quick puff on his cigarette and flicked some ashes on the carpet. “The desk clerk says that, besides himself, you and the victim were the only people here on the ground floor at the time of the murder. He says Miss Fritz came in about three and went straight to the pool for a swim like she always did, and that nobody else entered or left the hotel until an hour later, when you showed up.”

“What a crock!” I sputtered, on the verge of blowing my stack. “The desk clerk can’t possibly be sure of that. He was sound asleep when I came in! A full-grown elephant could have tromped through the lobby and gone for a dip without him knowing it.”

“Be that as it may,” Mudd grunted, “you’re still a prime suspect in this case.”

Great.

“And I’ve got a lot more questions to ask you.”

Swell.

“And if you know what’s good for you, you’ll give me straight answers.”

I was too weary to put up a fight. “I’ll be happy to answer your questions, Detective Mudd,” I said, “but does it have to be now? It’s been a very long, hideous night, and I’m exhausted. I had a blowup with my boyfriend, and found one of my dearest friends dead, and fell into a swimming pool, and now I can’t think straight. I need to go home and get some sleep.”

He looked at his watch and nodded. “Monday morning, then,” he replied, being far more accommodating than I’d thought possible. (Maybe he was weary, too.) “Come to the station for further questioning. Nine o’clock sharp.”

“Thank you, Detective. I’ll be there on time. May I have your permission to leave now?”

“You can leave the hotel,” he said, scar twitching, “but don’t leave town.”

Chapter 34

THANKS TO THE PROTECTIVE (AND SURPRISINGLY polite) public policy of the NYPD, Officer Murphy drove me home. It was eight o’clock Saturday morning. The sky was bright, the traffic was light, and the Italian merchants of Bleecker Street had begun opening the doors to their food shops, eager to rake in their weekend windfalls. When I got out of the squad car and headed into my building, the aroma of fresh-baked bread wafting from Zito’s bakery made my mouth water. Normally, I would have rushed to buy a loaf while it was still warm, but today I was too tired. I had barely enough energy to climb the stairs to my apartment and let myself in.

The second I stepped through the door, however, and caught sight of the large, manly figure lounging in my living room, my energy returned with a vengeance. It was Dan! And he was all in one piece! One great big, gallant, gorgeous, glorious piece. Sitting on the couch in his shirtsleeves, with his long, strong legs stretched out in front of him, he was casually smoking a cigarette and reading Sabrina’s lavender list.

“Thank God you’re here!” I cried, ripping off my jacket and beret and tossing them, with my purse, on a kitchen chair. “I’ve been so worried about you!” I bounded into the living room, leapt over Dan’s outstretched legs, and plopped down on the couch beside him. “How long have you been here?” My tail was wagging out of control, but I managed to stop myself from licking his face.

“Long enough to read this list and all your notes about the Pratt murder,” he said, sitting up straight and putting the stack of pages on the telephone table. “I see you’ve been a very busy girl.” He took a drag on his Camel and gave me a crooked smile. I couldn’t tell if it was hostile or friendly.

“Are you still mad at me?” I asked, sucking in a deep breath and holding it.

“I haven’t decided yet.”

I let out a tortured sigh. “When do you think you’ll reach your verdict?”

“When you stop deceiving me and tell me everything you know.”

“I’ve wanted to do that all along, Dan. I swear!”

“Then why didn’t you?” he snapped, aiming his jet black gaze right between my eyes.

“Because I gave Sabrina my word!” I croaked. “She said if the police found out that Virginia was a prostitute, they wouldn’t even try to catch her killer. She said they’d close up her whole operation, and arrest her and all her girls, and then Charlotte and Melody’s twin brother would be… Oh, what’s the use?” I cried, nerves tied up in knots. “You don’t know who or what I’m talking about. And the story’s so long and crazy and complicated you can’t possibly understand.” My hands were flapping around like birds, and I was on the verge of tears.

Dan loosened his tie, opened his shirt collar, and rolled up his sleeves. “You underestimate me, Paige, he said. “You always have. And this time it’s particularly insulting. I understand a lot more than you think I do. And I did even before I read your notes.”

“Really?” I said, perking up and paying attention, busting to learn how much he knew, and how and when he’d come to know it. “I’m glad to hear that, Dan. I really am! It’ll make it so much easier for us to talk about the case together. Look, I have a good idea. Why don’t you tell me everything you know, and I’ll fill in the blanks?”

Dan laughed out loud. “Nice carrot, Paige, but I’m not hungry. It’s time for you to do the talking.” (Was it my imagination, or had he suddenly slipped into a good mood?)

“But I don’t know where to begin,” I whined, trying to get my thoughts together. (I swear to God I wasn’t stalling. There was so much to explain, and I was so tired and discombobulated, I really didn’t know where to begin.)

“Well, for starters you can tell me where you were all night,” Dan growled, turning angry again. (That was the shortest good mood in history.) “I brought you home from the Copa around twelve, and you promised to stay here-with the doors locked- until I got in touch with you. That was eight goddamn hours ago. Why the hell didn’t you stay put, and where the hell have you been?”

“First of all, I did stay home for a long time, just like you told me to. I wrote up my notes and I made a few phone calls and I-”

“Who did you speak to?”

“A woman named Sabrina Stanhope,” I said. “She’s in my notes. She runs an elite call girl service and she’s the one who-”

“I know all about her,” Dan cut in. “Who else did you call?”

“Ethel Maguire, otherwise known as Brigitte. She’s one of Sabrina’s girls, and-”

“Anybody else?” he asked, too impatient to let me finish a sentence.

“You,” I said. “I called you at home and at the station, but you were nowhere to be found, so-”

“Is that it? Nobody else?”

“I tried to call Jocelyn a few times, but she didn’t answer. That’s why I-”

“Jocelyn Fritz?” he asked. “The one who goes by the name of Candy?”

“That’s right,” I said. “She was at the Copa last night, and she told me that she’d been seeing two of Sabrina’s major clients-Tony Corona and Sam Hogarth-without Sabrina’s knowledge. She said they were both devils in disguise, and she was certain one of them had killed Virginia.”

“Go on,” Dan urged.

“So when she didn’t answer her phone at three in the morning, I got worried about her. And that’s when I left the apartment and grabbed a cab to the Barbizon Hotel for Women, where she lived.”